Documentation of medication changes in inpatient clinical notes: an audit to support quality improvement.

Elsie Peusschers, Jaryth Twine,Amanda Wheeler, Vikas Moudgil,Sue Patterson

Australasian psychiatry : bulletin of Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists(2015)

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摘要
OBJECTIVE:To describe completeness and accuracy of recording medication changes in progress notes during psychiatric inpatient admissions. METHOD:A retrospective audit of records of 54 randomly selected psychiatric admissions at a metropolitan tertiary hospital. Medication changes recorded on National Inpatient Medication Chart (NIMC) were compared to documentation in the clinical progress records and assessed for completeness against seven quality criteria. RESULTS:With between one and 32 medication changes per admission, a total of 519 changes were recorded in NIMCs. Just over half were documented in progress notes. Psychotropic and regular medications were more frequently charted than 'other' and 'if required' medications. Documentation was seldom comprehensive. Medication name was most frequently documented; desired therapeutic effect or potential adverse effects were rarely documented. Evidence of patient involvement in, and an explicit rationale for, a change were infrequently recorded. CONCLUSIONS:Revealing substantial gaps in communication about medication changes during psychiatric admission, this audit sheds light on a previously undescribed source of medication error, warranting attention. Further research is needed to examine barriers to best practice, to support design and implementation of quality improvement activities but in the interim, attention should be addressed to development and articulation of content and procedures for documentation.
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